|
ONE
STOP |
|
|
|
The
Center for Tactical Magic
Fan
Francisco
Ghost
Machine

www.tacticalmagic.org/CTM/project%20pages/Ghost%20Machine.html |
|
Channeling
the Specters of Paranormal Politics
The
streets of Tbilisi, Georgia are haunted by a palpable past,
an ever-shifting present, and an unknowable, yet all too predictable,
future. At the center of an economic and strategic proxy war
between the US and Russia, Georgia is possessed by a newborn
democracy that is equal parts triumphant spirits and ominous
phantoms. In the post-Soviet capitol city of Tbilisi, the
remnants of remarkable architecture crumble to make way for
international banks, luxury hotels, and the newly-funded Baku-Tbilisi-Ceyhan
oil pipeline. And amidst the hopes and the fears, the rubble
and the glitz, comes… the Ghost Machine.
An
eerie mix of moans, groans, growls, and howls blares out across
the city from the public-address loudspeakers mounted atop
of an antique Soviet-era military vehicle. As it creaks and
rumbles down the main thoroughfare of Rustaveli Avenue, the
Ghost Machine gives voice to the competing anxieties and many
restless spirits gathering in the shadows. These sonic emanations
intervene in the aural landscape and provoke the living with
uncanny reminders of what has been and mysterious manifestations
of what yet may be. Like the city itself, the bashed and battered
truck appears to have lived many lives, having died and been
resurrected more than once. Now it is invoked to meet a new
set of challenges. |
One
hundred and sixty years ago, Marx opened the Communist Manifesto
with the words, “A specter is haunting Europe. It is the specter
of Communism.” In the wake of Soviet communism, the global
economics of neo-liberal capitalism has yet to fully banish
this specter from Tbilisi, but not for lack of trying. Nearly
the entire center-city is in the midst of redevelopment as
the unique mix of Byzantine, Art Nouveau, and Stalinist Neoclassical
architecture submits to retail chains, banks, and fast food.
At
one end of the main drag, the skeleton of a massive high-rise
clamors with construction workers laboring to transform the
Soviet hotel-turned-refugee-camp into the new luxury Radisson.
Across the way, McDonald’s faces off against Rose Revolution
Square, the plaza where the non-violent Rose Revolution replaced
a corrupt government with newborn democracy in 2003. And a
little further down the way, the former “Institute of Marxist
and Leninist Thought” is being transformed into a massive
5-star hotel.
In
the middle of the night, the Ghost Machine haunts each of
the sites in turn, along with several others including the
Ministry of Justice, City Hall, Parliament, and more. Sleepy
residents bury their heads in their sheets. Cabbies snicker
along conspiratorially. Drunks and thugs stare slack-jawed
in disbelief. The police gather en masse to complain authoritatively.
But despite these attempts to exorcise the Ghost Machine,
the ghosts themselves still haunt Tbilisi.
|
 |
Supported
by:
TMU
Trust for Mutual Understanding Foundation, New York, USA
US Embassy in Georgia |
|
|

|
|
| |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|